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Cravings grips southern Africa as Zimbabwe declares dry spell a catastrophe

President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Wednesday declared Zimbabwe's dry spell a nationwide catastrophe and stated the nation needed more than $2 billion in aid to feed millions dealing with hunger.

Mnangagwa's statement follows similar announcements by Zambia in late February and Malawi in March, as drought caused by the El Nino worldwide weather pattern activates a humanitarian crisis in southern Africa.

More than 2.7 million people in Zimbabwe will go starving this year, Mnangagwa informed reporters at the state house in Harare, adding that 80% of the nation had received bad rains.

Preliminary evaluations show that Zimbabwe requires in excess of $2 billion towards numerous interventions we imagine in our nationwide reaction, Mnangagwa said.

He said the government would prioritise winter season cropping to increase reserves, and work with the economic sector to import grains.

El Nino is a naturally happening weather condition phenomenon associated with an interruption of wind patterns that indicates warmer ocean surface area temperatures in the eastern and main Pacific.

A lot of provinces in Zimbabwe have actually experienced crop failure because November, with hotter locations stating grains such as maize a write-off.

Humanitarian firms including the World Food Programme, which fed 270,000 people between January and March in four districts, have actually described the cravings situation as alarming,. getting in touch with donors to provide more aid.

The dry spell in southern Africa has actually reached crisis levels. with Botswana and Angola to the west, and Mozambique and. Madagascar to the east also dealing with cravings.

(source: Reuters)